Speaking at Knesset session in memory of Ze'ev Jabotinsky, Netanyahu says "social justice does not oppose a free market, it depends on it."
By LAHAV HARKOV
Shortly before Knesset on Monday began the second reading of the National Housing Bill, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu described his socioeconomic vision for the country.Netanyahu participated in a Knesset tribute to Zionist leader and Likud inspiration Ze’ev Jabotinsky, and referred to the five basic needs every government must provide to its citizens according to Jabotinsky’s philosophy: a home, food, medicine, education and clothing.RELATED:Knesset set to begin vote on pivotal housing billMain points of PM’s ‘affordable housing’Fischer: Market concentration cause of high prices“At the same time, he said the economy must be free,” the prime minister explained, quoting Jabotinsky. “The state should stop poverty, but cannot limit success and the pursuit of happiness.”Netanyahu explained that the current housing crisis is not a result of “a private market cartel, but a worse one – the government, which controls 90 percent of the land in the country, and expected it to come out of one blocked-up faucet.”Earlier on Monday, the prime minister explained that his National Housing Committees Bill is the culmination of “two years of hard work in clearing the clogged pipes blocking the housing market,” and will allow the government to be “much more active in responding to the citizens’ needs.”The bill’s reading continued for hours on Monday, with many opposition MKs presenting their reservations. The second reading will continue on Tuesday, in a special plenum discussion set to begin five hours earlier than usual. The third and final reading and a vote are scheduled for Wednesday.The National Housing Committees Bill is one of the central components of Netanyahu’s housing reform plan. The measure is meant to circumvent usual construction- planning bureaucracy in order to build new homes. It would allow for the temporary formation of national housing committees, which would work to accelerate the process of approving building projects in the next year and a half.There will be one committee in every region, which will be responsible for providing all of the authorizations necessary to begin construction, for projects with more than 200 homes built mostly on state land, and include “accessible housing.”Coalition chairman Ze’ev Elkin said at a Likud faction meeting that the bill shows that his party is “helping to solve the housing crisis, as opposed to the opposition, which only has populist suggestions.”Netanyahu told the Likud faction that the government is working to reduce cartels and monopolies, and will change tax policies.
“It is good that these reforms are happening now, because these are the main issues that make the cost of living expensive, and we will take care of them,” the prime minister explained.The housing bill also became a point of contention in a Monday morning Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee meeting, with committee chairman Shaul Mofaz (Kadima) criticizing Netanyahu on his social policies.“The middle class is paying for your failures and the failures of your government in socioeconomic matters,” Mofaz said, adding that the 2012 state budget should be changed to reflect new issues.“We need to watch out for abstract statements about cutting the defense budget” in favor of the welfare budget, Netanyahu responded.Referring to the possibility of Arab riots following a UN vote on Palestinian statehood, Mofaz asked: “Will thousands of young [demonstrators] be asked to wear army uniforms in September because of your lack of initiative and unwillingness to lead a diplomatic process?” Likud MKs Miri Regev and Ofir Akunis, as well as MK Nissim Ze’ev (Shas), protested Mofaz’s use of the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee meeting to discuss the housing crisis, calling the move “political.”MK Binyamin Ben-Eliezer (Labor) said that when Yitzhak Rabin was prime minister, a housing reform was put in place, and lead to thousands of homes being built.“The faucets have gotten much tighter since then, but we are trying to turn them,” Netanyahu responded.Later on Monday, MK Arye Eldad (National Union) said that the prime minister’s “clogged pipes” metaphor gives the wrong impression.“The government is trying to present this bill as something that circumvents the bureaucracy, but thousands of homes have already been approved and aren’t built,” Eldad said.“A contractor who buys land and passes through the committee does not have to hammer even one nail for five years,” he said. “For five years he can hold onto the land, wait for prices to go up... If you want homes now, have the law require they be built within 12 months, not five years.”